If you don't really get what's going on in this almost sci-fi, almost magic realist, almost novel, you might as well be one of the characters in it, because misunderstandings and the incorrect assumptions of understanding abound. Conversations get lost in confusion as one person seems unsure of what the other is talking about while the other thinks that person is being merely snide and unhelpful, when in fact they are merely lost. The result is that a lot of information useful to the characters, and to us the readers, never gets completely explained.
What, if anything, is actually going on is held at a distance from us - unapproachability and hypersensitivity are the themes and lack of empathy is the result. Good intentions are misinterpreted, bad acts might not even be noticed, an horrific crime goes unpunished. Everything is jumbled. The story is told non-linearly with mixed-media: medical reports, National Geographic articles, photos, interviews transcribed inexpertly with illegible notes (even to the note-taker). The bad guy, if there possibly is one, is a Doctor named Ferenz, (meaning interference). Personal relationships, conversations, the novel itself (on purpose, I assume) all are affected by some issue with the transmission of the information that is (might be) there. Knowledge is oblique and often can only be inferred.
Sounds bad? But it is in fact a dizzingly enjoyable adventure (mmm, maybe not adventure) if you stick it out.
Certain children make their parents, or anyone who comes near them, ill (headaches, nausea, rashes) after a certain, individually variable time. These are the "indigo" children, said by some new-age expert, to have an blue-indigo aura. Less politely, they are called dingos - the Azaria Chamberlain story is referred to of course. Somehow or other, never explained, they interfere with people near them. Some unknown wavelengths of dysharmony, interference, physically make people near them sick. Just when you start to get a conversation going with a Dingo, the nausea kicks in and you have to move away. Therefore they grow up estranged, alienated, often angry and always damaged.
But from the Austrian school where well-to-do families send their afflicted children (how are *they* afflicted when it is others who become ill?) for special education, some of the children seem to be disappearing in big black cars, dressed in funny costumes (chimney-sweep, clown). The Math teacher Clemens J Setz (author's name!), notices this, tries to question the school's head and soon after is sacked. Setz is an unusually hyper-sensitive person to begin with (he faints a lot when things get stressful or unpleasant) so perhaps was not suitable as a teacher there anyway, but afterwards he becomes a writer and tries to investigate these strange things by interviewing some of the families and the children, and to find out who the mysterious Dr Ferenz is and what he has been up to.
Sixteen years later we also follow Robert, one of the Indigo children now grown up and "cured", but still terribly scarred, because Robert has heard that the now older Setz has just been acquitted of the horrible murder of someone who was mistreating dogs, and eventually decides to find his old teacher.
It is not an easy read, frustrating, always on the edge of telling you something, but not quite... and also because of the disconcerting and amazing metaphors Setz (the author, and the character as writer) is a master of - this book is a cliche-free zone. "A robust, lush Autumn day. Even the trams moved as if their mouths were full." "He tried to focus on the phrases with which he intended to explain why he had come. But all he saw when he looked into himself was a glass of milk from which a pleasant gleam of light emanated." An old umbrella looks like a crow with a broken wing that is sad because it will never again stretch out its skin to feel the rain.
I'm giving it 3 stars for the difficulty and confusion of not knowing what is going on, and five for the fact that this deliberate confusion is brilliantly done and for the striking writing, making an average of 4 stars.
I might reread this novel. If I do, chances are I will have to come and completely rewrite my synopsis here as I probably have it completely wrong.